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Born in Independence, Missouri , Sam Hildreth began his training career in 1887, competing at racetracks in the Midwestern United States . In 1898 he moved to New York City where thoroughbred racing was a leading sport offering the largest purses. He was first hired to train horses owned by wealthy businessman William Collins Whitney but soon set out on his own, buying horses for himself and training for others. He won his first of seven Belmont Stakes in 1899 with the horse " Jean Beraud " for owner Sydney Paget . By the turn of the century, Samuel Hildreth had expanded his New York operations and owned the largest racing stables at the Fair Grounds Race Course in New Orleans . That year, he appointed former Outlaw Frank James as his betting commissioner at the track. Among the horses Hildreth owned was " Fitz Herbert " (b.1906) who won the ''Brooklyn Handicap, Suburban Handicap'', and the ''Jerome Handicap'' enroute to being named Horse Of The Year in 1909 and again in 1910. Simultaneously his horse "King James" won other important races in 1909 including the ''Brooklyn Handicap, Metropolitan Handicap, Sheepshead Bay Handicap'', and the ''California Handicap''. In 1909 Hildreth also won his second Belmont Stakes with his own horse "Joe Madden" and went on to capture the first of three consecutive leading owner and trainer honors in the United States. Sam Hildreth's stable trained for other prominent owners such as August Belmont, Jr. for whom he won back-to-back Belmont Stakes in 1916 and 1917. He also met with great success training for Rancocas Stable owned by wealthy Oil industrialist Harry F. Sinclair . For Sinclair he won three Belmont Stakes with " Grey Lag " in 1921, " Zev " in 1923 and " Mad Play " in 1924. In an era before the Triple Crown had any significance, Hildreth only entered a few horses in the Kentucky Derby because of the time restraints for the long journey to Kentucky . As such, David J. Leary is listed as the trainer of Zev for his win in the 1923 Kentucky Derby . Back in New York, in October of that year, Zev defeated Epsom Derby winner Papyrus marking the first time a Kentucky Derby winner defeated an English Derby winner. Twice Sam Hildreth twice won more races in a year than any other trainer in the United States and was the top money-earning trainer nine times, a record that stood for more than sixty years until broken by D. Wayne Lukas in 1992. Hildreth's seven Belmont Stakes victories ranks him second only to James Rowe, Sr. and five times his horses won the Horse of the Year, the highest honor in thoroughbred horse racing. In 1925, Hildreth co-wrote an article with James R. Crowell titled ''"Down the Stretch"'' for the '' The Saturday Evening Post ''. The two then collaborated on a history of American racing in a book titled ''"The Spell of the Turf"'' published in 1926 by J. P. Lippincott & Co. of Philadelphia . After forty-three years as a horse trainer, Sam Hildreth passed away at a hospital in Manhattan, New York following an unsuccessful operation for an intestinal disorder. He was buried in Saratoga Springs, New York . In 1955, Sam Hildreth was posthumously inducted into the newly-formed National Museum Of Racing And Hall Of Fame . |
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